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The FReeper Foxhole Studies The Atlantic Wall - December 28th, 2003
see educational sources

Posted on 12/28/2003 5:40:52 AM PST by snippy_about_it



Lord,

Keep our Troops forever in Your care

Give them victory over the enemy...

Grant them a safe and swift return...

Bless those who mourn the lost.
.

FReepers from the Foxhole join in prayer
for all those serving their country at this time.



...................................................................................... ...........................................

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The Atlantic Wall


Festung Europa





"'Hitler built a fortress around Europe - but he forgot to put a roof on it'. "
~
Franklin D Roosevelt



The attack on the Soviet Union on June 22nd 1941 and the unexpectedly strong resistance put up by the Red Army forced the German High Command to transfer increasing numbers of troops away from the Western front, considerably weakening it in the process. When the United States entered the war in December 1941, fears of an Anglo-American landing intensified, and in the same month, Hitler reinforced his system of defence by ordering the construction of the Atlantic Wall. This gigantic project, entrusted to the Todt Organization, was begun in 1942 but had still not been completed by 1944, despite the efforts of Field-Marshal Rommel, who had been made responsible for the entire sector between the Netherlands and the Loire at the end of 1943.



The project involved building 15,000 structures along the entire coast of the North Sea, the English Channel and the Atlantic. This required the labour of 450,000 workers (both voluntary and impressed) and the use of 11 million tonnes of concrete and 1 million tonnes of steel for the reinforcing rods.

Despite the image that German propaganda sought to project, the “Wall” was not a continuous obstacle. It could basically be said to be composed of four types of structure: the fortresses, the coastal batteries, the close beach defences and the obstacles erected either on the beaches themselves or inland.

Many remains of the Atlantic Wall – more or less well-preserved – can still be seen today along the coast of Normandy.



More than 700,000 men were massed behind the “Wall”. In Lower Normandy, the German Army had the equivalent of between seven and eight divisions.

The fortresses

Ever since the Anglo-Canadian raid on Dieppe in August 1942, the Germans had been convinced that the Allies would try to capture a port during their next landing attempt, in order to ensure the swift arrival of the men, equipment and supplies they would need.

Accordingly, all the major ports along Europe’s western coastline were turned into veritable fortresses (Festungen), bristling with large-calibre guns intended to repulse any invasion fleet. The Seine bay sector was thus framed by the two fortresses of Cherbourg and Le Havre.



The Cherbourg Fortress, commanded by General Karl von Schlieben, extended along a 30-kilometre stretch of sea front on either side of the city, from Jardeheu in the west to Cape Levi in the east. There were no fewer than a dozen heavy batteries here, with a total of more than forty guns of a calibre ranging from 105 to 240 mm. The city and port were dotted with numerous blockhouses, antitank walls and anti-aircraft artillery positions.



Coastal artillery batteries

Between the fortresses, the Germans constructed coastal artillery batteries, under the control of either the army or the navy. Spaced several kilometres apart, they were designed to fire out to sea and ward off any invasion fleet. They were equipped with guns (usually with a calibre of betweetn 100 and 155 mm) which were generally grouped in fours or, more rarely, in sixes.



In all, there were more than twenty main batteries along the coasts of the Seine Bay between Le Havre and Cherbourg. Each of these was protected by a defensive perimeter ringed with minefields and a network of barbed wire, with machine-gun, mortar and anti-aircraft gun positions, connected by trenches.



Originally placed in open concrete pits, the guns proved vulnerable to Allied aerial bombardments, which had considerably increased in frequency since 1943. In order to protect them, Rommel ordered them to be placed in thick concrete casemates. This operation was far from complete by the spring of 1944, and as a precaution, some guns were discreetly removed from their emplacements and hidden inland.



On D-Day, the German coastal batteries offered only feeble resistance to the Allied ships, which overcame them without too much difficulty.

Close Beach Defences

The Widerstandnesten (“nests of resistance”) located within the immediate vicinity of the shore, on cliffs, dunes or sea walls, were lighter structures than the coastal batteries. They were intended to provide close defence of the beaches against assault troops.



They generally comprised one or two casemates housing medium-calibre guns (50, 75 or 88mm), positioned so as to rake the shore, Tobruks (concrete pits embedded in the ground and fitted with a circular lid where an infantryman could be posted) and mortar, machine-gun and anti-aircraft-gun positions, all connected by a network of trenches.



By the spring of 1944, there were no fewer than 200 Widerstandnesten along the coasts of the Seine Bay. There were, for example around fifteen along the six-kilometre stretch of beach between Vierville and Colleville (future Omaha Beach sector).



These close defences caused far more losses among Allied troops on June 6th 1944 than the coastal batteries.

Beach and inland defences

In December 1943, Field-Marshal Erwin Rommel was ordered by Hitler to inspect the Atlantic Wall. In January 1944, he was placed in command of Army Group B, responsible for defending the northeastern coasts of Europe, from the Loire to the Netherlands, i.e. the sector most directly under threat from an Allied invasion.

In Rommel’s opinion, the decisive battle would take place on the beaches, so with his customary zeal, he made every effort to plug the gaps he had identified in the Atlantic Wall and gave a fresh impetus to its construction. He ordered the artillery batteries to be protected by casemates, increased the number of close coastal defences and spiked the beaches with obstacles designed to stop any advancing assault barges and blow them up. The dunes were crammed with mines, while defences were also established inland, to counter any attack from the rear by airborne troops.



Minefields

A fervent believer in the massive use of mines as part of his defensive system, Rommel had the shores along the Channel and the North Sea crammed with them. By June 1944, between five and six million of them had been buried in the dunes, as well as inland, out of a planned twenty million.



The most common variety, the Teller mine, weighed 9 kilos and contained 5 kilos of TNT. It was triggered when a pressure of approximately 150 kilos was exerted on the detonator, which was located in the centre of the lid. The resulting explosion could destroy a wheeled vehicle or smash the tracks of a tank and immobilize it.



Teller mines, like the one we can see here, fixed to the top of a stake, were also used on beach obstacles, to destroy incoming Allied landing barges.

After the war, it took years of work, carried out in particularly hazardous conditions by french volunteers and German prisoners of war, to rid the coast of these deadly weapons.

Beach obstacles

Field-Marshal Rommel’s strategy consisted in blocking the Allied landing forces on the beaches.

In order to achieve this, he decided to cram the coast with vast numbers of obstacles designed to hamper the approach of the assault barges. His fertile imagination dreamed up a whole assortment of devilish traps against which the barges would crash, become impaled, be torn apart or explode, including “Czech hedgehogs”, “nutcrackers”, “Belgian gates” and "tetrahedra”.



The beach exits were also blocked by trenches and antitank walls or “dragon’s teeth”.

These obstacles proved more or less effective in the different sectors. As they had been positioned by the Germans to stave off an attack at high tide, the Allies chose to attack at half tide, and this enabled them to escape some of the dangers. However, on certain beaches, such as Omaha and Juno, they were unable to avoid them and consequently sustained heavy losses.



Defence against airborne troops

Imagining - not without reason - that the Allied landings would be accompanied by the dropping of airborne troops, Rommel took a series of measures to try and counter this possibility.

In order to prevent gliders from landing, he had large stakes planted in the fields - the famous Rommel’s asparagus.These stakes were sometimes linked together by strands of barbed wire nailed to their tops.



In the early months of 1944, large numbers of villagers were requisitioned to help the German troops fell trees, strip them of their branches and plant the famous “Rommel’s Asparagus” – jobs they often performed as slowly as possible, never hesitating to sabotage their work by planting the posts too shallowly in the ground.



He also gave orders for several low-lying inland areas to be flooded, such as the Aure valley and above all the Dives marshes, east of the Orne, and the Douve and Merderet marshes in the Cotentin Peninsula. In the night of June 5th-6th, a number of British and American parachutists did indeed drown in these traps, tangled up in their harnesses and weighed down by their equipment.

The German army in Normandy

In November 1943, as the prospect of an Allied landing became increasingly likely, Hitler decided to strengthen the German forces stationed in the West. Accordingly, the number of divisions in France, Belgium and the Netherlands was increased from around thirty in 1942 to nearly sixty by the spring of 1944.

Most of them were massed behind the coastline extending from Brittany to the Pas-de-Calais and were placed under the orders of Field-Marshal Rommel, who commanded Army Group B.


The 21st Panzer Division was the only armoured unit to be stationed near the coast.


Unlike most of the general officers, Rommel certainly did not exclude the possibility of an assault on the coast of Lower Normandy, where he stationed the 91st, 243rd, 352nd, 709th, 711th and 716th infantry divisions, together with the 6th Parachute Regiment, the 30th Mobile Brigade and the Buniatchenko Russian Brigade.

More or less confident about the worth of these troops, and realizing that he was almost totally lacking in aviation, Rommel wanted to be sure that he could rapidly call on armoured divisions to repulse the invasion, as he was convinced that the ultimate outcome of the battle would be decided in the first few hours.

He ran into strong opposition over this issue, however. In the event, only the 21st Panzer Division, stationed around Saint-Pierre-sur-Dives, was anywhere near the coast and it was in order to seek Hitler’s permission to station two new armoured units (the 12th SS Hitlerjugend and the Panzer Lehr) on either side of Veys Bay that he left his headquarters at La Roche-Guyon to travel to Germany on June 5th 1944.



The Atlantic Wall was a system of fortifications built by Nazi Germany which extended along the Atlantic coast of Western Europe, from Norway to the Spanish border. Not a wall in the true sense of the word, the Atlantic Wall was rather a series of German batteries built at strategic locations which were intended to thwart any potential amphibious invasions by destroying them while still at sea and to allow Germany to defend the coast of Europe with as few men as possible. The German fortifications at Longues-sur-Mer are a classic example of the pattern that was used for the Atlantic Wall.

Longues-sur-Mer

In general, the batteries which made up the Atlantic Wall followed a particular pattern. Along the shoreline a large command post or control bunker was built for the purposes of observation along the beach. At Longues-sur-Mer, the control bunker had two levels -- an upper observation deck and a lower level which housed the map room, radio room, officers' room, and range-finder room. The range finder was used to calculate the distances from the guns to the enemy targets and messages from the officers in the control bunker were relayed to the soldiers in the casemates by field telephone.



Four casemates were built inland, behind the control bunker; in the case of Longues-sur-Mer, the casemates were placed 300 meters behind the control bunker. Each casemate was 15m long, 10m wide, and 6m high; the walls were 6'6" thick and incorporated 600 cubic meters of concrete and four tons of steel reinforcement. Each casement also housed a large gun. The types and sizes of these guns varied from location to location, but at Longues, the guns were 152-mm German naval guns with a barrel 8m long, a firing range of approximately 13 miles, a firing rate of six 45kg. shells per minute, and a weight of 20 tons each.



The Atlantic Wall was considered to be nearly impenetrable by Hitler, since his fortifications were located on the tops of cliffs in practically impregnable locations. However, many factors contributed to their inability to successfully defend the European coastline. The Wall was never actually completed and construction at some of the bunkers was rather hasty. Often the personnel assigned to the the bunkers was second-rate, as Germany was fighting in the east as well as the west. It was not unusual to find gunners who were over the age of 40.



The battery at Longues-sur-Mer was defeated in June 1944 through a combined effort of both the British and the french. It has been preserved to this day as a Memorial of the war and the men who fought. The craters from the shelling, which at the time of the attack were 7m deep and 20m across, have never been filled and also serve as a testament to the violence and the magnitude of the conflict.



The batteries at Ouistreham, known as "Le Grand Bunker," and at Merville, are also examples of Atlantic Wall Fortifications which can found in Normandy today, though they are a little off of the typical tourist path.


Le Grande Bunker



Merville





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TOPICS: VetsCoR
KEYWORDS: atlanticwall; fortifications; france; freeperfoxhole; germany; normandy; rommel; samsdayoff; veterans; wwii
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To: Valin
1924 Rod Serling, Syracuse NY, writer/host (Twilight Zone, Night Gallery)

There weren't a lot of people with his talent around.

A paratrooper in World War II, when he was private, first class, of the 11th Airborne, Serling saw combat in the Pacific; he was a battalion boxer, a feisty guy who stood five feet five and weighed in at 135.

In the spring of 1964, to celebrate his fortieth birthday, Serling hit the silk at Fort Bragg in North Carolina with 120 other jumpers. He made a leap with 35 other men from a C-124 Globemaster 2,000 feet above the earth. Serling was the second man out. I recall asking him how it felt.

He grinned. "There was one guy to lead me—and thirty-four to push me out."

21 posted on 12/28/2003 8:46:52 AM PST by SAMWolf (This Christmas I got a battery with a note saying, "toy not included.")
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To: The Mayor
Good Morning Mayor
22 posted on 12/28/2003 8:47:50 AM PST by SAMWolf (This Christmas I got a battery with a note saying, "toy not included.")
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To: E.G.C.
Morning E.G.C. Getting our rain today.
23 posted on 12/28/2003 8:49:13 AM PST by SAMWolf (This Christmas I got a battery with a note saying, "toy not included.")
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To: bentfeather
Good Morning Feather.


24 posted on 12/28/2003 8:51:35 AM PST by SAMWolf (This Christmas I got a battery with a note saying, "toy not included.")
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To: baltodog; Darksheare; The Mayor; snippy_about_it
Good morning baltodog. Welcome to the Foxhole.

Thanks for your service and we thank your dad for his service.

Grab a cup of the Mayor's coffee or try some of Darksheare's "Drink of Doom" that he trys to pass off as coffee.
25 posted on 12/28/2003 8:57:49 AM PST by SAMWolf (This Christmas I got a battery with a note saying, "toy not included.")
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To: SAMWolf
Thank you Sam, I learned a lot from this post. :-)
26 posted on 12/28/2003 8:57:58 AM PST by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: baltodog
You've been added to the "Fall In" to the Foxhole list.
27 posted on 12/28/2003 9:02:12 AM PST by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: SAMWolf; baltodog; Darksheare; snippy_about_it
Grab a cup of the Mayor's coffee or try some of Darksheare's "Drink of Doom" that he trys to pass off as coffee

OMG! you aren't gonna do that to him, well I guess if you must.... at least my coffee is the real thing..

28 posted on 12/28/2003 9:21:20 AM PST by The Mayor (You don't need to know where you're going if you let God do the leading)
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To: snippy_about_it
The Atlantic wall was real intresting. Thanks for all your hard work.
29 posted on 12/28/2003 9:43:28 AM PST by bulldogs
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To: bulldogs
Thank and good afternoon to you bulldogs. Glad you found your way to the FReeper Foxhole daily thread and enjoyed the read!
30 posted on 12/28/2003 9:45:32 AM PST by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: The Mayor; Darksheare; baltodog
He's Air Force, I figure the smell of jet fuel should familiar to him by now. :-)
31 posted on 12/28/2003 9:51:02 AM PST by SAMWolf (This Christmas I got a battery with a note saying, "toy not included.")
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To: snippy_about_it
G'morning ma'am
32 posted on 12/28/2003 9:56:00 AM PST by Professional Engineer (pssst Hey Kid, wanna be a Rocket Scientist?)
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To: SAMWolf
good point!
33 posted on 12/28/2003 9:56:14 AM PST by The Mayor (You don't need to know where you're going if you let God do the leading)
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To: SAMWolf
Woo Hoo great feathers SAM! Thanks so much.
34 posted on 12/28/2003 9:56:19 AM PST by Soaring Feather (I do Poetry. Feathers courtesy of the birds.)
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To: snippy_about_it
My father-in-law was on Omaha. He received a Bronze star. What a great guy. I really miss him. He passed away a few years ago. I would be honored to be on your ping list.

Thank you snippy. Good afternoon to you also.
35 posted on 12/28/2003 9:57:01 AM PST by bulldogs
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To: snippy_about_it
Rommel's Efforts
by Jeremy Gypton



Upon taking his new post and setting up his headquarters in France, Rommel set to work attempting to implement the changes he saw as essential. Von Rundstedt’s desire to prepare for a decisive inland battle, coupled with Hitler’s demands for heavy fortifications at certain points along the coast had resulted in a disjointed series of efforts. Hardly constituting a cohesive strategy, these moves seemed to fall into the trap of defending all, and yet defending nothing. The diametrically opposed strategies of constructing a solid coastal line versus preparing for a mobile inland battle were mutually irreconcilable. They could not be achieved simultaneously, given Germany’s manpower and material limitations brought on by the cost of the Eastern Front and deployment decisions by Berlin.

The problems faced by the German defenders of the Western Front, as of early 1944, were essentially two-fold. First was the issue of settling on where the invasion was most likely to take place. Second, and just as important, was the issue of just how to defend these sites, once selected. Using his influence with local commanders and a great deal of personal correspondence with Hitler, Rommel went about implementing his plan, however contradictory it might have been to the prevailing perceptions of his (nominal) superior von Rundstedt or the ever-shifting flow of favor and support coming from Berlin. Rommel had once said that Hitler always believed and supported the last person with whom he had met; (22) Rommel aimed at being this person.

Rommel’s fear, based on the information he gathered and defenses he inspected during his tour, was that Allied forces would quickly break through the weak coastal line and, within days, establish a solid beachhead through which supplies and men would pour unhindered. Among his first initiatives was the taking soldiers off their training schedules and putting them to work building obstacles, minefields, and other means by which the Allies could be stopped before moving inland, or even before they landed. Up to the end of 1943 most construction efforts on the Western Front were undertaken by Organization Todt (OT), “Hitler’s construction and labor force”(23). The engineers were pouring some 300,000 cubic meters of concrete each month. Most work, however, was concentrated on Hitler’s “fortresses.” This can be seen through the utilization of OT workers: an average of 63 were assigned, per kilometer of coast, in the Pas de Calais area. The Normandy area, lacking as many heavy fortifications, averaged only about 16 per kilometer(24). A further example of this emphasis on the ports is this: “only between Le Havre and Cherbourg were two naval batteries constructed on the open coast,”(25) with the remainder being at the ports themselves. While much attention had been lavished on the ports, the beaches themselves, especially along the Calvados coast (where the landings all took place), were largely ignored.

Rommel’s eventual choice of Normandy as the most likely site for the invasion came around March 1944. The Allies, no doubt, had an idea as to how strong the defenses were at Calais, and knew that a landing there would be a costly risk, at best. A suitable alternative was the Normandy coast, between the Orne River and the port of Cherbourg, on the northern tip of the Cotentin Peninsula. With roads immediately inland of the major beaches in the region, enemy units would, once key crossings, towns and bridges were seized, be able to advance into France’s interior and toward the Rhine-Ruhr region, just as Rommel feared. Allied air bombardments, for some time, had been concentrated on isolating the Normandy region from Calais to the north by cutting off the fastest and most direct routes reinforcements would most likely take. Bridges, key roads and railroads throughout northern France had been targeted, but those that linked Normandy to the rest of the country had been given particular attention.

Much like his defenses at El Alamein, Rommel wanted to create a series of defensive layers, each intended to slow the Allies’ approach, thus making them vulnerable to German fire from positions along and just behind the beaches. “Rommel [remembered] how his deep minefields…held up [British] tanks for days”(26), and aimed at recreating this same sort of defense in Normandy. He ordered that “rows of obstacles, mined or otherwise, [be] erected below the high water mark”(27) in order to sink enemy landing craft. More mines, wire, and steel obstacles were to be placed on the beaches themselves. When Rommel arrived in France “1.7 million mines had been laid, with a monthly supply of only 40,000”(28). Rommel’s goal was to have 50 to 100 million mines laid by the time the Allies attacked. In keeping with the “anything goes” attitude the Germans had toward munitions and the arming of their troops, the Desert Fox ordered that explosives were to be taken from old shells, captured French stockpiles, and anywhere else they could be found. If he could not have well-built German anti-ship, anti-armor and anti-personnel mines, he would settle for old artillery shells with improvised fuses. By the end of May 1944, over 4,000,000 mines had been laid along the channel coast; over half of them on Rommel’s initiative, and most of those in April and May.

The first line of defense would consist of four belts of underwater obstacles, many to be armed with explosives to blow up landing craft, or built to tear the bottoms out of the same. In his own notes, Rommel set out the following plan for the construction of obstacles in the water:

1. A belt in six feet of water at mean high tide.
2. A belt in six feet of water at half-tide of a twelve-foot tide.
3. A belt in six feet of water at low tide.
4. A belt in twelve feet of water at low tide.

Rommel believed that the invasion would come at high tide, when the Allies would have the shortest distance to cover before attacking German positions; his underwater obstacles were built to fend off such an attack. His intent was “not only to halt the…hundreds of landing boats and ships…but also to destroy his landing equipment and troops”(30). Limited by time and resources, however, the Germans were only able complete the first two belts by the time invasion came, and even then only in certain sectors. According to Army Group B’s War Diary, by “13 May 1944, a total of 517,000 obstacles had been constructed along the cost, 31,000 of which were fitted with mines.

If the Allies made it to the beaches, they would be faced with pillboxes, concrete bunkers, flamethrowers, and machineguns – all of which had sighted their overlapping zones of fire. Just beyond the beaches, “heavy anti-tank guns, self-propelled guns and anti-aircraft combat troops standing ready in the forward part of the defense zone,”(31) would be positioned, to be rushed up to the coast wherever needed. To augment the forces stationed on the coast, Rommel regarded as “urgently necessary” having additional divisions immediately inland to prevent a breakthrough. “The battle for the coast will probably be over in a few hours, and if experience is any judge, the rapid intervention of forces coming up from the rear will be decisive” (32). He believed that the Luftwaffe would be essential in enabling the movement of these reserves; someone would need to hold off Allied aircraft.

Obstacles in the water and on the beaches, and troop emplacements immediately along the coast were built to withstand the initial enemy naval and air bombardments that would surely precede the invasion, and to stop the invasion itself once initiated. The layers of underwater mines would be followed by steel walls, running parallel to the shore and topped with mines. Next would be more mines (mostly improvised explosives using old artillery shells) attached to the tops of posts sunk into the sea floor. More mine-tipped logs and poles would follow, as would “hedgehogs,” which were welded steel constructs tipped with again, more mines. Walls of barbed wire would complete the defensive zone through which the enemy would need to pass. Where this zone ended, German artillery and machinegun positions began.

Control of the forces located immediately on the coasts was a problem in and of itself, with the navy controlling all artillery for targets at sea. The army would take control once enemy forces had landed. This presented a complication when defining exactly what constituted a landing. Whether the transfer of control took place when Allied troops were actually ashore and out of the water or in landing craft headed toward shore was up for dispute, and added to the many organizational problems already facing the Germans.

Rommel also paid close attention to the many fields spread across the Normandy region, in anticipation of glider landings which would enable Allied forces to secure key crossroads and bridges, and disrupt German units as they moved forward to the coast. In order to hinder these landings, simple, but eventually effective, obstacles were erected throughout the region. These consisted of telephone poles sunk upright into the ground, sometimes with a grid of wire connecting their tops together. These wires, when supplies were made available, would be attached to explosives, which would in turn be tripped by any movement of the interconnected poles. Gliders would break up upon landing, killing troops, destroying equipment, and breaking the tempo of enemy operations.

This was, at least, Rommel’s plan. The poles, 10 feet tall and spaced about 100 feet apart, (33) were not equipped with explosives (mostly captured French ordnance); the shells needed were not released to Rommel until only a few days before the invasion, and were thus not installed. Still, the presence of these stout obstacles did hinder Allied glider landings and contributed to the injury and death of many Allied soldiers. To round out his defenses against paratroopers and enemy units moving inland, Rommel also ordered a great many fields throughout the southern Cotentin to be flooded. It is interesting to note that Rommel ordered that fresh water be used wherever possible instead of seawater; he recognized the damage such water would do to the farm fields.

As the spring of 1944 passed, Rommel’s vision of the Allied attack became more specific and defined, and his countermeasures correspondingly were arranged to meet his design of what the enemy would eventually throw against him. Along with massive amphibious landings, supported by naval and air attacks on coastal positions, he saw the possibility for “parachute troops…in very large numbers, dropped…either along the coast or a few miles inland”(34). These troops would either support the landings or take on some operational role of their own. Rommel’s picture of the coming Allied attack, in retrospect, was almost exactly in line with Allied plans, aside from his assumption that the invasion would come at high tide, and probably later in the summer.

The Allies, according to the operations order written for the invasion, believed that “the Pas de Calais [was] the most strongly defended area on the whole French coast”(35) and that, therefore, landings in that area would be very difficult. Progress, if a landing were successful at all, would be slow and would require a northern expansion into Belgium in order to secure adequate ports for larger operations in the future.

Allied intelligence suggested, “The Caen sector is weakly held…defenses are relatively light and the beaches are of high capacity and sheltered from…prevailing winds. Inland…terrain is suitable for airfield development and…consolidation of the initial bridgehead…much of it is unfavourable (sic) for counter-attacks by panzer divisions.”(36) With this in mind they had settled on the beaches of Normandy, stretching from just east of Caen to the western base of the Cotentin peninsula. These landings, to take place at first light and at low tide (in order to expose as many underwater obstacles as possible), would be preceded by airborne drops inland. Three airborne divisions would seize key bridges, crossroads, and hold exit routes from the beaches. Once the lodgment had been secured the Allies would take the port of Cherbourg and the entire Cotentin peninsula, and then move out of the bocage and toward Paris. It was hoped that the city of Caen, the largest in the region, would be taken within the first days of the invasion. Again, this plan was for all intents and purposes the same that Rommel had envisioned would be used and was actively constructing defenses against. One can assume that this skill and insight Rommel possessed are what brought him such fame and esteem among German soldiers and political leaders.

Through the lens of time, one can see that in addition to the material and manpower shortages in France, and the sorry state of those units on station, that time was much more of a threat to the success of Rommel’s plans than he could have known. The slow Allied build-up in England, beginning in 1942, had reached critical mass by early summer of 1944, and the Allies were ready to attack. Indeed, as the Desert Fox had predicted, a combination of airborne drops and massive amphibious landings took place, albeit several weeks earlier than he had anticipated. Believing that weather conditions were wrong, and that the Western Allies’ attack would coincide with the Soviet summer offensive, Rommel was confidant that the invasion, as of early June, was not imminent. Accordingly, he took a short vacation to see his wife in Germany and to bring her a gift for her birthday.

36 posted on 12/28/2003 9:58:38 AM PST by SAMWolf (This Christmas I got a battery with a note saying, "toy not included.")
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To: Professional Engineer
Good morning PE. Should I call you sir? LOL.
37 posted on 12/28/2003 10:04:45 AM PST by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: bulldogs
You've been added to the "Fall In" Foxhole ping list. We are grateful for your father-in-law's service and sorry to hear of his passing. Which branch of service was he in?
38 posted on 12/28/2003 10:06:31 AM PST by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: SAMWolf
He grinned. "There was one guy to lead me—and thirty-four to push me out."

I never knew of his military service, thanks for the information.

39 posted on 12/28/2003 10:08:34 AM PST by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: SAMWolf
Rommel was confidant that the invasion, as of early June, was not imminent. Accordingly, he took a short vacation to see his wife in Germany and to bring her a gift for her birthday.

LOL. Ooops.

40 posted on 12/28/2003 10:12:32 AM PST by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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